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1,600,000
Population in 1760
1,780,000 Population
in 1780
42 Percentage
growth in population, 1760-1780
500,000
Approximate population of black slaves, 1763-1774
34,000
Population of largest city (Philadelphia)
6.3
Average children per family
26.7
Average age of marriage for males
23.7
Average age of marriage for females
5.2
Percentage of males never marrying
20.8
Percentage of females never marrying
33.3
Percentage of births out of wedlock
90
Percentage of work force engaged in agriculture
17
Percentage of population that belonged to church, 1776
270
Number of students at Yale, largest of any college, in 1783
5
Number of days it took to travel from Philadelphia
to Baltimore
160
Gallons of alcohol passed out by G. Washington to 391 potential
voters when running for his first political office,
175
150,000
Barrels of rice exported to Britain by Carolina
and Georgia, 1770
$36,500,375
National debt, 1783
$134,645,177 Total
cost of the Revolutionary War
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~~~~~ "Among other things which will prevent a conciliation, the contempt every soldier has for an American is not the smallest. They cannot possibly believe that any good quality can exist among them." A British Soldier, 1779 ~~~~~ Nocturnal deer hunting in the Carolinas was made a misdemeanor in 1784 because of the accidental slaughter of many cows and horses. ~~~~~ The decision of Louis XVI to ally his country with the United States made final American victory possible; but it so overburdened the precarious French economy that it led to revolt in France and to the well-meaning King's overthrow. ~~~~~ Women got the vote in New Jersey in 1776 but lost it in 1807, when laws restricted the electorate to free white males. ~~~~~ Philadelphia publisher Benjamin Towne began the Pennsylvania Evening Post, America's first daily newspaper, in 1783. ~~~~~ New England's use of the scarlet letter A for adulterers was abandoned in 1782. ~~~~~ Many Redcoats scoffed at New Englanders as "Yankees" by the 1750s, and doodle was a hoary title for a half-witted fool. That meant that the finished compostion, "Yankee Doodle" was an open insult to all colonists, not simply those of Massachusetts and adjoining regions. A Yankee Doodle was a bumpkin who was awed and mystified by so simple an experience as his first encounter with a military drum: With heads made out of leather They knocked upon it with some sticks To call the folks together . . . " ~~~~~ "Intolerable oppressions? No, no none of that" Levi Preston said, when many years after the Revolution, Preston, a member of the Danvers militia, was asked why he had marched to fight at Concord. Was it the Stamp Act? The Tea Tax? "What we meant in going for those Redcoats was this: We always governed ourselves, and we always meant to. They didn't mean we should." |
Bibliography: Adams, Jr., Russell B., ed., The Revolutionaries (1996); Ketchum, Richard M. ed., The American Heritage History of The American Revolution (1971); *Garrison, Webb, Great Stories of the American Revolution (1990) pg165; Andrews, Jr., Joseph L., Revolutionary Boston, Lexington and Concord; The Shot Heard Round the World (1999).